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Robert Rauschenberg’s Spreads and Scales at Gladstone Gallery


All Photos By Gail

Do you love the art of Robert Rauschenberg? I sure do. I was super excited last week to pop into Gladstone Gallery (it had been a while between visits) to find that they’re currently hosting an exhibition of Rauschenberg’s layered, multidimensional wall- mounted and sculptural works from his Spreads and Scales series. You rarely see these works outside of a museum, and this is the first show to highlight the two related series —  made between 1975 and 1983 — in New York for more than 40 years. These important bodies of work demonstrate the artist’s unparalleled ability to expand the artistic possibilities of recognizable, everyday objects by ingeniously juxtaposing and combining forms in space.


Earthstar Express (Spread) 1979

Rauschenberg’s work has resisted simple categorization since the beginning of his career, pushing against the boundaries of what is possible through art. When he began making work in the late 1940s, many of his peers were employing the visual language of Abstract Expressionism. Rauschenberg, however, was guided by an ideology wherein art and the realities of life intersected, which allowed him to connect previously distinctive modalities of artmaking into single forms and astonishing bodies of work.


Green Gauge (Spread) 1981

His aptly titled Combines (1954-64), which brought together real-world objects and abstract painting, portrayed this sentiment with piercing clarity, and helped him gain the reputation as one of the most inventive, forward-thinking artists of his generation.


Green Gauge (Detail)

Rauschenberg’s seemingly instinctual ability to connect images, forms, and mediums carried throughout his career, and is powerfully demonstrated through his Spreads and Scales. The Spreads (1975-1983) are large- scale, wall mounted works with protruding three dimensional elements. The title implies a wide expanse of land as well as a fabric covering. The sometimes freestanding Scales (1977-1981) expand upon this idea to incorporate large found objects into, alongside, or on top of surfaces covered in transposed imagery. The two series shown together demonstrate the uniqueness of Rauschenberg’s vision and approach to experimentation across a variety of chosen mediums.


Miter 1 (Scale) 1980

By the time he began making the Spreads and Scales, there had been many significant developments in Rauschenberg’s life that had major influences on his artistic approach. Early studies at Black Mountain College where he first developed an interest in photography, travels with artists like Cy Twombly, his move to New York and then subsequent relocation to Captiva Island in Florida, as well as collaborations with printmakers, engineers and choreographers all contributed to his singular style and uncategorizable oeuvre.


Trojan Wedge (Scale) 1977

The beginning of these new series, paired with this culmination of experiences and experiments, coincided with the opening of a significant mid-career retrospective in 1976 at the National Collection of Fine Arts, now the Smithsonian American Art Museum, in Washington, D.C., which allowed Rauschenberg an opportunity to look back at years of important early work. The impact of this opportunity would forever change his practice; it allowed him to revisit what he had accomplished and opened the way for new possibilities from this point forward.


Hydrangea Reflex (Spread) 1978

Expanding upon the conceptual framework of his Combines, the Spreads and Scales merge his arsenal of ideas and the technical prowess at this critical juncture to form works that teeter between paintings, sculptures, and photographs, masterfully demonstrating the artist’s unquestionable inventiveness throughout his life that continues to inspire artists working today.


For a Friend and Krazy Kat (Spread) 1976

Robert Rauschenberg’s Spreads and Scales Runs Through June 17th, 2023 at Gladstone Gallery, Located at  530 West 21st Street, NYC.


Mongolian Cousin (Spread) 1980



This post first appeared on The Worleygig | Pop Culture • Art • Music •, please read the originial post: here

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Robert Rauschenberg’s Spreads and Scales at Gladstone Gallery

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